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Following its hurried exit from Nigeria, more reactions have followed HSBC and UBS’ decision to leave Nigeria.

It would be recalled that the Swiss National Bank (Central Bank equivalent) said in its regulatory update that HSBC and UBS have exited their Nigerian operations as foreign direct investment continues to slump in Africa’s largest economy.

SNB noted in its report that foreign direct investment in Nigeria fell to 379.84 billion naira ($1.2 billion) in the first half of the year from 532.63 billion naira ($1.7 billion).

The Nigerian government had in recent times accused HSBC of assisting politically-exposed individuals in laundering and moving funds out of Nigeria.

In a report by in a 40-page report cited by Aljazeera, Global Witness said that five leading banks failed to adequately investigate the source of tens of millions of dollars taken from two Nigerian governors accused of corruption.

“Banks are quick to penalise ordinary customers for minor infractions but seem to be less concerned about dirty money passing through their accounts,” Robert Palmer, a campaigner at Global Witness, wrote on the group’s website.

“Large scale corruption is simply not possible without a bank willing to process payments from dodgy sources, or hold accounts for corrupt politicians.”

Global Witness acknowledged that in accepting the money, Barclays, NatWest, Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) and HSBC, as well as Switzerland’s UBS, might not have broken the law, but noted that the Financial Services Authority (FSA) must do more to prevent money laundering through British banks.

“The FSA needs to do much more to prevent banks from facilitating corruption. As yet, no British bank has been publicly fined or even named by the regulators for taking corrupt funds, whether willingly or through negligence,” Global Witness said in the report.

“This is in stark contrast to the United States, where banks have been fined hundreds of millions of dollars for handling dirty money.”

‘Deeply disappointed’

HSBC dismissed the allegations in the “International Thief Thief” report, saying that it had taken the lead in tackling holes in the financial system, particularly regarding funds from “politically exposed persons” (PEPs) deemed to pose a higher money laundering risk.

“As a bank that has been at the very forefront of developing global PEP guidance over the last decade, we are deeply disappointed with these misguided allegations,” a spokesman for HSBC told the Reuters news agency.

“Rest assured, rigorous and robust compliance procedures were followed diligently. To ignore this is to ignore the facts.”

Barclays, HSBC and UBS are all members of the Wolfsberg Group, an international body set up in 2000 to try to improve global anti-money laundering procedures.

Global Witness said its findings were based on court documents from cases the Nigerian government has brought in London in an attempt to get funds returned that it said were stolen by two former state governors: Diepreye Alamieyeseigha of Bayelsa state and Joshua Dariye of Plateau state.

Alamieyeseigha was accused of corruption after he was caught with about $1.6m in cash at his London home. He was briefly jailed in Nigeria after pleading guilty to embezzlement and money laundering charges two years later.

Dariye was arrested in 2004 in London and was found to have purchased properties worth millions of dollars even though his legitimate earnings amounted to the equivalent of $63,500 a year.

He returned to Nigeria, where the anti-corruption agency has accused him of looting public funds. He has denied any wrongdoing.

Corruption ranking

The report did not provide any evidence that the funds accepted by the banks were the direct proceeds of any crime.

Africa’s most populous nation is regularly ranked one of the most corrupt countries in the world. It ranked 130th out 180 nations in Transparency International’s list of country’s perceived as most transparent in 2009.

Most of its 150 million people survive on $2 a day or less, yet the country is one of the world’s top champagne importers and its wealthiest residents are among the continent’s richest.

Nuhu Ribadu, the former head of its anti-corruption agency, has estimated that corruption and mismanagement swallow up about 40 per cent of Nigeria’s annual oil income.

“Without access to the international financial system, it would be much harder for corrupt politicians from the developing world to loot their treasuries or accept bribes,” Global Witness said in its report.

Neither UBS nor HSBC have commented on the development.

The Nigerian government under the leadership of President Muhammadu Buhari has hampered on its stance to fight corruption since it came into office in 2015. While opposition figures have countered the government for a one-sided fight on corruption, others have condemned its handling of the economy responsible for scaring foreign direct investment.